Atheist Bus Ads and Billboards

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Norm Geisler references TrueFreethinker.com:
Apologeticspress.com’s Kyle Butt references TrueFreethinker.com:

Read the article about which Gary Habermas, PhD (Distinguished Research Professor & Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary) said, “I have hung on to it since you sent it, & plan to keep doing so”: Historical Jesus – Two Centuries Worth of Citations.

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“In Good We Trust” by the American Humanist Association

Who ever said that Atheists are not charitable? Well, polls, studies, research does and while they are the least, traditionally, charitable amongst us, they do, untraditionally, donate tremendous amounts of money.

Do they tend to donate to orphanages? No. What about homeless shelters? No. Hospitals perhaps? No. Disaster relief organizations? No.

List most common receivers of charity and the answer is no.

To what then do they donate money? They literally wasted tremendous amounts of money in order to put up atheist bus ads and billboards which are meant to demonstrate just how clever they consider themselves to be rather than actually doing anything to actually help anyone in actual need.

Enter the American Humanist Association who posted a billboard reading “In Good We Trust.”
They report the following in “In Good We Trust,” Says New Humanist Billboard:
[The billboard is] the latest of a series of billboards…in place of the national motto, the coin reads “In Good We Trust”…”This billboard nicely sums up two of the main messages of the American Humanist Association,” said Roy Speckhardt, executive director of the AHA. “First, that you don’t have to believe in God to be good–in fact, humanists and other nontheists see being good as one of the most important of responsibilities in our one and only life. Second, that church and state should remain separate for the benefit of us all.”

Let us take a moment of clarity break at this juncture and consider some points. Indeed, the billboard does nicely sums up the main messages of the American Humanist Association. As typical Atheists, they are an anti-Christian support group which seeks to remove “In God We Trust” from public view and replace it with their assertion that “In Good We Trust.” It will be interesting to see how they will rewrite the document whereby the USA declared its independence, The Declaration of Independence, which affirms that our inalienable rights come from “nature’s God…our Creator.”

The AHA has consistently demonstrated that they are so ensconced in well-within-the-box-Atheist-group think-talking points-de jour that they do not even know that the argument is not about “you don’t have to believe in God to be good” but that without YHVH “good” is relative and tentative. For example, while they claim that “being good [is] one of the most important of responsibilities” they do not define what “good” is, how we determine it or why we ought trust in it. Keep in mind that many Atheists, such as Sam Harris claim that rape played a beneficial role in human evolution. Richard Dawkins claims that today rape is only arbitrarily immoral. Dan Barker claims that rape is not absolutely immoral. On it goes and the point is that on some atheist’s view rape was once “good.”

Think of it this way: everything that has happened in the past has benefited human evolution by ridding us of the weak and preserving the strong—the survival of the fittest. Thus, on this view death, genocide, extinctions, brutality, cannibalism, rape and much more was, at least in the past, “good.”

Now, seeing that the AHA seeks to remove references to God and replace them with references to their “main messages.” In which case we need to ask: if church and state should remain separate what about the separation of Atheism and state? Also, by the way, “In God We Trust” does not run afoul the First Amendment as that statement does not establish a state (national) religion.

Fascinatingly:
David Niose, president of the American Humanist Association, pointed out that the official national motto had an unsavory beginning. “The adoption of the ‘In God We Trust’ motto came at the height of the Cold War and McCarthyism in the 1950s, and it is unfortunate that we still cling to such religious rhetoric today.

Indeed, the official national motto was adoption in order to reiterate the Declaration of Independence and in order to differentiate the USA’s Judeo-Christian principle from those of the Atheist Communist regimes who were slaughtering hundreds of millions of people. What is noteworthy is that they were not slaughtering hundreds of millions of people as collateral damage, as it where, of wars. Rather, they were slaughtering hundreds of millions of their own people because according to their Atheism inspired worldviews their citizenry were nothing but animals at various stages of evolution and many were mere unless eaters.

Overall, as it always the case in fact, both the billboards and their explanations are stunningly fallacious and they are based upon anti-Christian prejudice and not upon bothersome facts.

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A plea: I have to pay for server usage and have made all content on this website free and always will. I support my family on one income and do research, writing, videos, etc. as a hobby. If you can even spare $1.00 as a donation, please do so: it may not seem like much but if each person reading this would do so, even every now and then, it would add up and really, really help out. Here is my donate/paypal page.

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Twitter: #Humanism, #AmericanHumanistAssociation, #Atheism
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Ariane Sherine

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Norm Geisler references TrueFreethinker.com:
Apologeticspress.com’s Kyle Butt references TrueFreethinker.com:

Read the article about which Gary Habermas, PhD (Distinguished Research Professor & Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary) said, “I have hung on to it since you sent it, & plan to keep doing so”: Historical Jesus – Two Centuries Worth of Citations.

atheist20nothing-cam-5783170

Connecting the Dots – Atheist Bus Ads and the Stated Intentions Behind the Propaganda

[Note: I am reposting this as I have to move it from whence it was originally posted long ago]

While atheists worldwide have wasted money on themselves rather than helping people in need during a time of recession by donating money for bus ads and billboards (which I dissected here) two are in view: “No God? …No Problem!” and “Please don’t label me. Let me grow up and choose for myself”.

Let us see if we can manage to connect some of the dots:
1) Certain celebrity atheists have taken it upon themselves to declare that parents who teach their very own children their very own faith are “child abusers.” This refers to the overwhelming majority of all people who have ever lived by a very, very, very wide margin. I have personally experienced this unpleasantly in person.

2) The atheists-celebs have admitted that they want to interrupt such families, that they want society to step in, that they want children to choose no religion at all, that they write atheist propaganda in the guise of fictional books for children, they teach promote atheism in the guise of “evolution” and “science.”

3) Now they are attempting to piggy back on the United Nations in spreading their condemnations far and wide.

4) The adherents of the atheists-celebs promulgate such goals by donating vast amounts of money to purchase bus ads and billboards (not counting endless articles, posts, essays, comments, etc.). They are either not aware of the underlying and admitted intention or, when made aware of it, ignore it and continue their cult of personality worship undisturbed.

If you can be good without God then, get around to it already as studied consistently show that atheist and agnostics are amongst the least charitable, least sociable and lest moral amongst us.

This latest round of anti-“religion” and pro-converting children to atheism ads has brought with it very troubling examples of atheists who are very zealous for pushing their beliefs on everyone.

Three militant comments across which I have run, with relation to their views on anything non-atheistic, are:

[in response to the statement] “Children are born without the knowledge of there being a god…” Right, and we should be working to keep it that way, if only to spare this planet.

my passion when it comes to seeking to abolish legendary thinking from the face of the earth

Surely, we need to combat this kind of thing the right way

Passion, abolish, combat, keep children atheists, to spare the planet; this is pure militancy. The issue is that these are not statements from the New Atheist celebs who at least stand to make their living by expressing their emotive belligerence and seek to gain a following by instigating prejudice. These are statements made to me via comment section by John and Jane Doe, by your friendly neighborhood atheists who have nothing to gain—except seeing the ultimate triumph of atheism over all.
It is more frightening to me that good old fashioned nobodys would be so very militant than when the celebs engage upon this sort of all hail atheism! activism. I am also painfully aware that these three statements are mere drops in the bucket, a very, very large bucket, and surely many of you are thinking, “That’s nothing! You should read this, and this, and this, and this…” Also, I am sure that many of you are thinking that you could quote “religious” people who are equally zealous. True enough. 1) this would be granting my point by not denying it, 2) this would show that these supposedly erudite in all things atheists are just as mindless, zealous and emotive and 3) would demonstrate that rejecting “religion” and God are of no benefit.

As it has been stated, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing and this latest promulgation of propaganda has also brought about picture perfect examples of certain atheist who have fallen for one of the atheistic consoling delusions: the delusion of being more erudite than thou. They loudly and proudly display their illogicality and lack of knowledge of that which they seek to critique.

Someone wrote this to me (off-blog) and they are clearly ignoring the evidence and blindly marching on:

I think when church groups put malicious Bible quotes on the sides of buses, that sort of counts as propaganda too. It just so happens that theirs is based on a dubious source written by a succession of lunatics.If that’s Pullman’s true aim, then I’m right behind him. These religions themselves are not based on anything but the attempt to bring communities together under a set of laws. That religious faith still exists to this day is a sad reflection of humanity’s unwillingness to step into the light by themselves.And if those bus ads helped one person see that light, or feel less guilty about not believing in a god, or make just one person able to say to themselves or others ‘yes, I AM an atheist’ then I would argue that they did serve a “material need.”As for the charge that we are ignorant, well… again, there are many reasons not to believe in a god. Personally, I see the world and can’t see any need for a god to explain anything about it. Then I look at the various ‘holy books’ and can see nothing but rhetoric and drama. They truly are evil books in many ways.

Arrogant? It’s arrogant to think that the creator of the Universe personally loves you and cares about what happens to you. It’s arrogant to think it personally moulded you, and our little planet. Believing that the Universe doesn’t care about us and that we came about through the flawed process of evolution isn’t arrogant. Trying to spread an enlightened message that people can be good without god isn’t arrogant. Trying to show people that they don’t owe loyalty to a non-existent tyrannical king isn’t arrogance, it is a message that needs to be heard.

I responded thusly,

Thanks for your thoughts.

You admit that they are propagandizing—good, one less thing to discuss.

That you support the weaving of atheist propaganda into children’s books affirms my point that they are not out to liberate children but to stand between them and their parents in order to convert them to atheism—good, one less thing to discuss.

That you view atheism (of which sect, by the way?) as an enlightening “step into the light…see that light” is indicative of Nietzsche’s prediction of the atheist spirituality which was to come.

I am not certain how it fills a “material need” to affirm one’s atheism (again, which sect?) I referenced true, real world recession.

I did not claim that atheists in general are ignorant. I was contextually referring to the ad conceivers and Dawkins, Pullman, Dennett, etc. as they do not know, consider or admit that there are culturally based reasons for referring to, for example, as “Jewish child” and then, after a bar/bat mitzvah, there are religious/theological reasons. Same with Confirmation, etc.

If it is true that the creator of the Universe personally loves you and cares about what happens to you, that it personally molded you, and our little planet then it is not arrogant but fact.
But again you are making an uncontextual remark as my reference to arrogance was not to your arrogant claim to know that “the Universe doesn’t care about us…” but to the fact that the propagandists want to step between “religious” parents and children and that they refer to such parents as “child abusers.”

Lastly, I am not aware of an argument to the affect that people cannot be good without God, maybe some people say that, I for one do not, I believe this to be a straw man.

I wonder upon what you condemn anything as “evil.”

All of your arguments from personal incredulity which you spike with emotive arguments from outrage notwithstanding.

Another person wrote me this (also off-blog):

Where I have said that I disagree with slogans on buses, it comes from a view that sees as in plain poor taste – somewhat ‘beneath’ the sober perspective that can be had from a good scientific and philosophical ground.I wholly agree that labelling children, muslim, protestant, or whatever is very, very, wrong indeed – and it does happen.In Northern Ireland, where I am from, children really do grow up on one side of the divide that religious factions create ‘regardless’ of any intrinsic knowledge of the concomitant religion. People engage in grouping very quickly, and emulate their parents etcThere are though, other more worrying states of play where children are indeed sat down, at the age of five (such as myself) and told emotionally loaded stories about why it is good become christian (for example), often followed with a little prayer of commitment to a blackness that lies behind the eyelids.Dawkins point is surely, contrary to what Ken says, that children can indeed make a commitment to something which, yes, they do not have any real understanding of and which can provide a seat for the further parasitisation of religious ideals.Surely, we need to combat this kind of thing the right way – education.

At any rate, I often giggle at the possible effect that the slogan “There probably is no God…” might have had on the person who hadn’t really given it much thought and then become a little concerned by the “probably” and gone on to adopt Pascal’s wager!

To this I responded:

Good and fine dear sir, you believe that labeling children as such “is very, very, wrong indeed.” Done. Now leave us alone.

I was raised by an atheist and an agnostic and was treated like pure trash when I rebelled against secularism. There is plenty of this to go around. What personages who concoct and support such ads are attempting to do, as I proved, is to stand between parents and children and attempt to convert children to atheism thereby, causing a one side against the other grouping.

There are also other more worrying states of play where children are indeed sat down, at the age of five and indeed thought their entire public school education where referencing God is illegal and told emotionally loaded stories about the entire universe and everything in it occurring uncaused and by accident, that we are nothing but glorified animals and that when we die we are simply annihilated—a blackness so all consuming that it is feared even by the blackness which lies behind the eyelids. They are taught that they are DNA reproducing machines, that there is no ultimate ethos and not ultimate justice. And on it goes.

As Dawkins has admitted and his adherents support, this time seeking to piggy back on the United Nations, that he is out to convert them.

Children can indeed make a commitment to something which, yes, they do not have any real understanding of and which can provide a seat for the further parasitisation of atheistic ideals.

I wonder if your point is that reasonable atheism, which is really agnosticism, is too soft for you and what you are proposing is a “faith” based believe in God’s non-existence.

These, again, are mere examples of quite a few pages worth of illogicality and the promulgation of misconceptions that I could provide.

Note the following,

Brian McClinton, of the Northern Ireland Humanist Association, is frustrated at what he calls the “wilful misunderstanding” of the campaign. “We’re not devil-worshippers.”[1]

Can we agree on this much; neither am I, neither is my wife and neither are my children.1

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A plea: I have to pay for server usage and have made all content on this website free and always will. I support my family on one income and do research, writing, videos, etc. as a hobby. If you can even spare $1.00 as a donation, please do so: it may not seem like much but if each person reading this would do so, even every now and then, it would add up and really, really help out. Here is my donate/paypal page.

Due to robo-spaming, I had to close the comment sections. However, you can comment on my Twitter page, on my Facebook page and/or on my Google+ page.

Twitter: #Atheism, #ArianeSherine, #Propaganda
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santa claus

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Norm Geisler references TrueFreethinker.com:
Apologeticspress.com’s Kyle Butt references TrueFreethinker.com:

Read the article about which Gary Habermas, PhD (Distinguished Research Professor & Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary) said, “I have hung on to it since you sent it, & plan to keep doing so”: Historical Jesus – Two Centuries Worth of Citations.

atheist20nothing-cam-6362159

Christmas

Pray tell, what do Atheists do every Christmas?

And I mean besides telling anyone who (does not) care to listen, that it is all so very stupid—and besides raking in the presents from mommy and daddy?

They, like the mainstream media, get foaming at the mouth ravenously angry at Christians enjoying themselves and so they hit the airwaves, cyberspace, print media, etc. in order to inform us that, you guessed it, Christmas (and Easter) are Pagan—because for some reason this has something or other to do with Atheism.

Now, as you can see in the following, this is not true in either case:

Atheists, I still love you—God

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Norm Geisler references TrueFreethinker.com:
Apologeticspress.com’s Kyle Butt references TrueFreethinker.com:

Read the article about which Gary Habermas, PhD (Distinguished Research Professor & Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary) said, “I have hung on to it since you sent it, & plan to keep doing so”: Historical Jesus – Two Centuries Worth of Citations.

atheist20nothing-cam-4771684

An anti-nativity scene atheist conspiracy in Santa Monica, CA?

“They’re just jealous because they don’t have three wise men and a virgin in the whole organization.” —Mayor Vincent J. `Buddy’ Cianci, on the ACLU suing to have a nativity

scene removed from gov. property

Hereinafter, we will consider the fracas over Santa Monica, CA nativity scenes and the atheist backlash.

Most of the Christmas nativity scenes that churches had placed in a Santa Monica coastal park for decades have been displaced by non-religious displays — and the churches are crying conspiracy. 1
“Conspiracy” oh, oh, better get your aluminum hats out!

The Santa Monica Nativity Scenes Committee…has traditionally claimed 14 of the 21 display spaces…But atheists got all but three of the spaces this year because of a new lottery system. The coalition got two spots to display Jesus, Mary and the wise men. The third went to Isaac Levitansky of Chabad Channukah Menorah…Adding to the loss, the atheists have used only three of the display areas to promote their message. One reads: “Religions are all alike — founded upon fables and mythologies. — Thomas Jefferson.” “Happy Solstice,” reads another. And a display with photographs depicting King Neptune, Jesus Christ, Santa Claus and Satan reads, “Million Americans know MYTHS when they see them. What myths do you see? American Atheists. Since 1963. athiests.org.”
Firstly, how apropos that the atheists came out on top due to a blind, random chance happenstance: a lottery.

Secondly, we see three typical atheist tactics: 1) Claim the equal right to display, get what they want, not use them the majority of them as the point was to complain and not to actually do much of anything. 2) While theists of all sorts are joyfully celebrating, atheists want to put in their malicious two cents as they have nothing positive to say but are always on the attack.

3) The spaces that atheists did use are loud and proud displays of well within the box atheist group think talking points de jour and are logical embarrassments.

Let us consider these:
1) “Religions are all alike — founded upon fables and mythologies. — Thomas Jefferson.” So much could be stated for one, on an atheist view religion, fables, mythologies, etc. came about as things that assisted human survival. So, who are the atheists to demand, as self-appointed un-natural selectors–arbiters of evolution, that humans, from 1st to 3rd world countries, cease and desist in believing them? In nature, nature being all that there is in an atheist universe, all that matters (for some unknown reason) is survival. You can survive by ascertaining empirical truth or by being utterly deluded and it matters not which path you choose. Of course, what greater mythical fable is there but that nothing caused nothing to become something. Or that eternal uncaused matter became everything. Or that life came from non-life. Or belief in crypto-zoological creatures such as the “common ancestor.” And, and, and, etc., etc., etc. Thomas Jefferson wrote the following to Peter Carr:

If you find reason to believe there is a God, a consciousness that you are acting under his eye, and that he approves you, will be a vast additional incitement; if that there be a future state, the hope of a happy existence in that increases the appetite to deserve it; if that Jesus was also a God, you will be comforted by a belief of his aid and love.

Also, deist or not, Thomas Jefferson attended Christian worship services which took place at the Capitol Building—something for which today, he would be sued and impeached.

2) “Happy Solstice,” reads another.
This denotes that atheism does have a “spiritual” side, that this side is Neo-Pagan Atheism and that the Bible is correct about those who replace awe in YHVH with awe in nature:
…unrighteousness of men, who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, because what may be known of God is manifest in them, for God has shown it to them. For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse, because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened.
Professing to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man-and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things…who exchanged the truth of God for the lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen.” (Romans 1:18-25).

3) And a display with photographs depicting King Neptune, Jesus Christ, Santa Claus and Satan reads, “Million Americans know MYTHS when they see them. What myths do you see? American Atheists. Since 1963. athiests.org.” This is a vociferous admission of the fact that American Atheists lack knowledge of that which they besmirch. The myth is clearly evident and it is that nothing brings about something, that accidental happenstances bring about information, etc. King Neptune was displaced by the one true God YHVH. Santa Claus was indeed mythologized from the real Saint Nicholas who is known for Christ inspired charity. God is a philosophically necessary being whilst Neptune and Santa are not. Moreover, natural theology/natural revelation points us to a personal God and not to Neptune or Santa—see:

On the Flying Spaghetti Monster, the Invisible Pink Unicorns, et al.

Many atheists reject God at very, very early ages—generally due to rebellion against their own childish theologies, bad experiences with overbearing parents and religious groups, etc.—and so their view of God, their theologies, remain childish and undeveloped. Thus, we get atheist talking points which correlate God to Santa, Tooth Fairy, invisible friends, “Sky Daddy,” and even the Flying Spaghetti Monster and Invisible Pink Unicorns—see:

Why Atheism is chosen

Atheism’s arguments against theism, or Atheism’s “atheology”

In this regard, there is a YouTube playlist dedicated “Santa Syndrome case studies” wherein evidence is brought forth that show a correlation between young age rejection of Santa Claus and young age rejection of God.

Now, back to the alleged conspiracy: why is conspiracy being alleged?:
… 13 people bid for spaces…Two individuals got 18 spaces…Damon Vix is behind the effort to allocate the spaces by lottery. Last year, he put up a sign with the Thomas Jefferson quote and selections on U.S. Supreme Court decisions about the importance of separating church and state. Vix now helps other atheists acquire the park spaces, including American Atheists Inc. and the Freedom From Religion Foundation. This is what the anti-Christian atheist activist Damon Vix had to say:

“For 60 years, it’s almost exclusively been the point of view of Christians putting up nativity scenes for a whole city block,” Vix said.

True story: before this writer came to accept that Jesus is the Messiah, he felt the same exact way. Yet, even before accepting Jesus as Messiah he grew up and did so via pure logic. Since the majority of the citizenry of the USA are Christian it is simple mathematics that “it’s almost exclusively been the point of view of Christians putting up nativity scenes”—particularly during Christmas, by the way. Moreover, Christmas is a Christian holiday and so Christians decorate for Christmas. The end of December marks no atheist holiday at all. Yet, since atheism is an anti-Christian support group which is premised upon a negative assertion, atheists feel that 1) any and every religious display is a personal affront and 2) they must ever be on the offensive by offending those who are attempting to joyfully celebrate.

Overall, it seems that the atheists won most of the spots not due to random lottery but intelligent design.

Check out this case study of “Santa Syndrome”:

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A plea: I have to pay for server usage and have made all content on this website free and always will. I support my family on one income and do research, writing, videos, etc. as a hobby. If you can even spare $1.00 as a donation, please do so: it may not seem like much but if each person reading this would do so, even every now and then, it would add up and really, really help out. Here is my donate/paypal page.

Due to robo-spaming, I had to close the comment sections. However, you can comment on my Facebook page.

Twitter: #SantaClaus, #Atheism, #SantaSyndrome
Facebook: #SantaClaus, #Atheism, #SantaSyndrome